UPDATE: The San Antonio Museum of Art has announced “Corita Kent and the Language of Pop” will not reopen. It is anticipated that roof repairs will not be complete until the third week of May and another exhibit — “Highest Heaven: Spanish and Portuguese Colonial Art from the Collection of Robert and Richard Huber” — opens in June. The museum will continue to present four videos from the Kent exhibition that show the artist at work. They will be played in the auditorium on a continuous loop. The screenings are free.

The San Antonio Museum of Art has closed its blockbuster exhibit “Corita Kent and the Language of Pop” while the building undergoes repairs.

The roof of the Cowden Gallery, where the exhibit was on display, was damaged during the hail storm that pummeled the city Tuesday night. According to a statement on the museum’s website, no artworks were damaged.

“Corita Kent and the Language of Pop,” a traveling exhibition from the Harvard Art Museums, features more than 60 prints by the activist and Roman Catholic nun alongside works by contemporaries including Andy Warhol, Ed Ruscha and Roy Lichtenstein. It recently was featured on a segment of “CBS Sunday Morning.”

Until the exhibit is reopened, the museum is waiving the surcharge on “Rodin: The Human Experience,” an exhibit of 32 bronzes by the French sculptor.